Course Content
How to ask formal and informal questions in English?
The Skill of Asking Questions in English Asking questions effectively in English—or any language—is a critical communication skill that requires understanding grammar, intonation, context, and cultural norms.
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General English Language Course
About Lesson
    • UK English (RP): 44 phonemes (more distinct vowel sounds).

    • US English (GA): 39 phonemes (fewer vowels due to mergers).

    • Consonants (Contoids) are nearly identical in both.

    • Vowels (Vocoids) differ significantly, affecting accents.

      1.  

1. /w/ – The “W” Sound

Articulation:

      • Produced by rounding the lips (like the vowel /uː/ in “food”).

      • The back of the tongue rises slightly toward the soft palate.

      • Voiced (vocal cords vibrate).

Examples:

      • “win” – /wɪn/

      • “water” – /ˈwɔːtər/ (UK), /ˈwɑːtər/ (US)

      • “quick” – /kwɪk/ (Note: /kw/ is a consonant cluster)

      • “swim” – /swɪm/

Key Features:

      • Always appears at the beginning of syllables or after another consonant (e.g., “twist” /twɪst/).

      • Cannot appear at the end of a syllable in English (unlike some other languages).


2. /j/ – The “Y” Sound

Articulation:

      • Produced by raising the front of the tongue toward the hard palate (like the vowel /iː/ in “see”).

      • Voiced (vocal cords vibrate).

Examples:

      • “yes” – /jɛs/

      • “yellow” – /ˈjɛləʊ/

      • “music” – /ˈmjuːzɪk/ (Note: /mj/ is a consonant cluster)

      • “cute” – /kjuːt/

Key Features:

      • Often appears before high front vowels (/iː/, /ɪ/, /eɪ/).

      • In some accents, /j/ is dropped (e.g., “news” = /njuːz/ in UK, /nuːz/ in US).


Why Are /w/ and /j/ Called Semi-Vowels?

      1. Vowel-Like Articulation:

        • /w/ is similar to /uː/ (as in “moon”).

        • /j/ is similar to /iː/ (as in “see”).

      2. Consonant-Like Behavior:

        • They cannot be the syllabic nucleus (unlike vowels).

        • They appear at syllable onsets (e.g., “we” /wiː/) or in clusters (e.g., “twin” /twɪn/).


Comparison Table

Feature /w/ (as in “wet”) /j/ (as in “yes”)
Articulation Lip rounding + back tongue raising Front tongue raising
Vowel Similarity /uː/ (as in “food”) /iː/ (as in “see”)
Syllable Position Onset (start of syllable) Onset (start of syllable)
Example Words “win,” “queen,” “swim” “yes,” “music,” “cute”

Key Takeaways

    • /w/ and /j/ are glides—they act like consonants but are produced like vowels.

    • They cannot form syllables alone (e.g., no English word is just /w/ or /j/).

    • They often appear before vowels (e.g., “we” /wiː/, “you” /juː/).